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10-30-2016, 07:05 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-30-2016, 02:54 PM by Mikebert.)
(10-14-2016, 03:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-14-2016, 08:34 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: (10-12-2016, 08:12 PM)disasterzone Wrote: I also wonder what would happen to a 4T type person who's angry that the revolution they wanted never happened and thinking everything's too wishy washy and mild. Someone who wants to push their 4T ideology on the max and believes that should have been the solution.
Can you give some examples of what you might be talking about? Fourth turnings are basically pushed to the max already. Pushing things further would involve stuff like executing all southern whites after the Civil War, or nuking Japanese and German cities after they had surrendered unconditionally; I'd think advocates of such things would just be ignored.
An example is someone upset that their solution to the 4T wasn't taken because things went a totally different way than what they think should have happened. It could be someone who was the loser in a war in some cases and now on the demonized side, other cases it could be someone who wanted a solution that the people rejected, even if they weren't at war with the other ideology at the time. Like a person who wanted the South to succeed from the union and was still angry at Abraham Lincoln. Or maybe even someone who was angry that communism wasn't used as the solution to the great depression and wished they had that type of a revolution in the US.
Well think of things like the KKK and Redeemer governments, or Buckley's conservative movement. Both were 1T responses taken by folks on the losing side in the prior 4T who sought to keep the flame lit. In the subsequent 2T they got their chance, eliminating black suffrage and subsquently enacting Jim Crow over 1890-1908 in the Great Power saeculum, and the beginning of a operational program for the conservative movement proposed in the Powell memo which flowered into the Reagan Revolution in the Milsaec.
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10-30-2016, 12:05 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-30-2016, 12:07 PM by FLBones.)
(10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
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(10-30-2016, 12:05 PM)FLBones Wrote: (10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
What happens to Civics or very old artists who find themselves at odds with society during the 1T when the 2T comes around? Would they feel relieved or would they feel their life was wasted because they were forced to live so much of it in eras they were at odds with? Would they lament being born in the wrong time?
Also what would happen to one of them if despite conflicting with so many people, continued to get their way during the 1T? Would it cause major hate and resentment?
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(10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
It depends on the age of the person , man. Rags will be an old man and if folks see him all lit up on whatever, [booze,weed, "mothers little helper II", passersby will just shrug and say, eh, he's old and earned the right to be chemically altered.
Also, folks started doing meth in the 1950's
So, the upcoming 1T is just a past is prologue for Rags. I just want weed legalization to continue apace so it gets normed just like booze and ciggies in the 1950's. In closing, 1T's are when "Better Living Through Chemistry" comes into its own , and for that, Rags is looking most forward to the end of the icky 4T and towards another 1T and most likely another 2T of chemical bliss.
PS.
Millies, please invent some nifty new mind altering chemicals for Rags to enjoy.
---Value Added
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(10-30-2016, 12:05 PM)FLBones Wrote: (10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
The High is prosperous enough to allow some attractive diversions. If people did not numb themselves in the cocktail longes of the High, there was television. Work pays well enough to provide copious cheap entertainment. Above all, 3T behavior is stigmatized for making the Crisis as nasty as it was. Cultural figures from the 2T have made their adaptations or they are forgotten. Such fictional characters as Lina Lamont ( Singin' in the Rain) and Nora Desmond ( Sunset Boulevard) find themselves irrelevant as cultural trends of the 4T develop; if they have not adapted they become even more irrelevant in the High.
I doubt that many people had much nostalgia for the Roaring Twenties after World War II, except perhaps for the Harlem Renaissance among blacks. Even that was scrupulously repressed outside of big urban centers in the North and West.
Where the dissent arises is among people who want to participate fully in the bounty of a High and are denied -- like Southern blacks -- or among people with empathy for the oppressed. Were the likes of Rosa Parks, Medgar Evers, and Martin Luther King rebels... or conformists? I say the latter.
The real cause of the Awakening is that for the first time people enter adulthood with no memory of the strictures of the previous Crisis, people who have the inclination for some cultural recklessness.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.
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(10-30-2016, 11:38 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: (10-30-2016, 12:05 PM)FLBones Wrote: (10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
The High is prosperous enough to allow some attractive diversions. If people did not numb themselves in the cocktail longes of the High, there was television. Work pays well enough to provide copious cheap entertainment. Above all, 3T behavior is stigmatized for making the Crisis as nasty as it was. Cultural figures from the 2T have made their adaptations or they are forgotten. Such fictional characters as Lina Lamont (Singin' in the Rain) and Nora Desmond (Sunset Boulevard) find themselves irrelevant as cultural trends of the 4T develop; if they have not adapted they become even more irrelevant in the High.
I doubt that many people had much nostalgia for the Roaring Twenties after World War II, except perhaps for the Harlem Renaissance among blacks. Even that was scrupulously repressed outside of big urban centers in the North and West.
Where the dissent arises is among people who want to participate fully in the bounty of a High and are denied -- like Southern blacks -- or among people with empathy for the oppressed. Were the likes of Rosa Parks, Medgar Evers, and Martin Luther King rebels... or conformists? I say the latter.
The real cause of the Awakening is that for the first time people enter adulthood with no memory of the strictures of the previous Crisis, people who have the inclination for some cultural recklessness.
But what if someone's takeaway from the 4T was that stability didn't exist so you may as well take risks? Someone who instead of feeling like they were shaping the 4T that the 4T just took them along this arbitrary ride they were forced to be in. Then the 1T tried to force them in a box and take their dreams away. Who felt so deprived at the end of it, they wanted to have a 3T lifestyle?
What I wonder is how people in the 1T would react if someone lived so foolishly to them (like the 1990s or roaring 20s) but succeeded because of the extreme risk taking? In other words, how would the people of the 1T react to a person who lived against their wisdom but won or got what they wanted in the end? Would they be villainized?
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(10-30-2016, 10:50 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-30-2016, 12:05 PM)FLBones Wrote: (10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
What happens to Civics or very old artists who find themselves at odds with society during the 1T when the 2T comes around? Would they feel relieved or would they feel their life was wasted because they were forced to live so much of it in eras they were at odds with? Would they lament being born in the wrong time?
They would be relieved. Wiesner, for example, was a GI who let student protesters occupy his office without trying to keep them out.
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(10-31-2016, 07:54 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: (10-30-2016, 10:50 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-30-2016, 12:05 PM)FLBones Wrote: (10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
What happens to Civics or very old artists who find themselves at odds with society during the 1T when the 2T comes around? Would they feel relieved or would they feel their life was wasted because they were forced to live so much of it in eras they were at odds with? Would they lament being born in the wrong time?
They would be relieved. Wiesner, for example, was a GI who let student protesters occupy his office without trying to keep them out.
What will happen to people who backlash against their place during the 1T and don't wait until afterwards? As in people who react to the now rather than the later. I don't have time to wait around til I'm 60.
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10-31-2016, 09:59 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-31-2016, 10:04 AM by pbrower2a.)
(10-30-2016, 11:49 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-30-2016, 11:38 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: The High is prosperous enough to allow some attractive diversions. If people did not numb themselves in the cocktail longes of the High, there was television. Work pays well enough to provide copious cheap entertainment. Above all, 3T behavior is stigmatized for making the Crisis as nasty as it was. Cultural figures from the 2T have made their adaptations or they are forgotten. Such fictional characters as Lina Lamont (Singin' in the Rain) and Nora Desmond (Sunset Boulevard) find themselves irrelevant as cultural trends of the 4T develop; if they have not adapted they become even more irrelevant in the High.
I doubt that many people had much nostalgia for the Roaring Twenties after World War II, except perhaps for the Harlem Renaissance among blacks. Even that was scrupulously repressed outside of big urban centers in the North and West.
Where the dissent arises is among people who want to participate fully in the bounty of a High and are denied -- like Southern blacks -- or among people with empathy for the oppressed. Were the likes of Rosa Parks, Medgar Evers, and Martin Luther King rebels... or conformists? I say the latter.
The real cause of the Awakening is that for the first time people enter adulthood with no memory of the strictures of the previous Crisis, people who have the inclination for some cultural recklessness.
But what if someone's takeaway from the 4T was that stability didn't exist so you may as well take risks? Someone who instead of feeling like they were shaping the 4T that the 4T just took them along this arbitrary ride they were forced to be in. Then the 1T tried to force them in a box and take their dreams away. Who felt so deprived at the end of it, they wanted to have a 3T lifestyle?
What I wonder is how people in the 1T would react if someone lived so foolishly to them (like the 1990s or roaring 20s) but succeeded because of the extreme risk taking? In other words, how would the people of the 1T react to a person who lived against their wisdom but won or got what they wanted in the end? Would they be villainized?
Society will be taking big-enough risks (huge investments in capital, both material and human) to satisfy most people. Yes, there will be the equivalent of James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause who chafes at the strictures that he is unready to challenge.
I can't tell you what the 2030's equivalent of hot rods and motorcycles will be. Taking a bland vehicle and customizing it? Who would have expected such with the Model T and Model A Fords when such cars were still commonplace as late as the early 1940s on the highways because there were no new cars being built for civilian use. We have since seen Low-riders, very clever expressions of what can be done with old cars with clean lines. So what can you expect to be done with a 30-year-old Honda Accord? Maybe I expect the pop culture of the 2030s to show some whimsy with songs resembling "Mister Sandman", the sorts of music that repressed young Adaptive kids find tolerable. And what will be the equivalent of the malt shop? A malt shop with wireless fidelity?
The end of the 4T will be some form of stability, like it or not, that people either lack the means or temperament to challenge. That stability could either be a nation still wallowing in its righteous triumph over evil, a nation partitioned into ideologically- or culturally-disparate camps (think of the divided Germany between 1945 and 1990) in which a return to the Bad Old Days from 1933 to 1945 are out of the question (they still are, and if I were obliged to leave America as a political fugitive, Germany would be toward the top of my list as possible refuges) , or even a reversion to inescapable primitivism because of the destruction of technology and intellectual infrastructure in an apocalyptic war. It's arguable that the last is the hardest reality to escape.
But we have yet to see the final struggle of this Crisis defined. So aside from some broad generalities what can we say of what life will be like in 2035? We have yet to know what the institutions in place at the end of the Crisis will be. If certain people prevail, it will be a new Gilded Age, except with no frontier of small-scale enterprise. How does that work? 95% of the people suffer for the indulgence of 2%... and you can just imagine what sort of political dissent that will create in the Awakening.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.
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11-07-2016, 12:01 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-07-2016, 12:05 AM by Einzige.)
This is basically what I exist for. I'm too old to be the next Allan Ginsberg or William S. Burroughs, but I want to be the guy who influences the next Allan Ginsburg or William S. Burroughs and to be so remembered by proxy.
One aesthetic influence on my thinking is the industrial rock scene of the last Third Turning, whether relatively more underground acts like Godflesh and Swans or mainstream acts like Nine Inch Nails and Marilyn Manson. I feel like those people had Something Important To Say, but the time for it isn't yet. I'd like to be a medium, a conduit to transmit that thinking to the cutting-edge of the next Artists, who in turn pass it on to the Neo-Prophets.
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(11-07-2016, 12:01 AM)Einzige Wrote: This is basically what I exist for. I'm too old to be the next Allan Ginsberg or William S. Burroughs, but I want to be the guy who influences the next Allan Ginsburg or William S. Burroughs and to be so remembered by proxy.
Best wishes with that.
Quote:One aesthetic influence on my thinking is the industrial rock scene of the last Third Turning, whether relatively more underground acts like Godflesh and Swans or mainstream acts like Nine Inch Nails and Marilyn Manson. I feel like those people had Something Important To Say, but the time for it isn't yet. I'd like to be a medium, a conduit to transmit that thinking to the cutting-edge of the next Artists, who in turn pass it on to the Neo-Prophets.
No comment.
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11-07-2016, 05:26 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-07-2016, 05:29 AM by Eric the Green.)
(10-30-2016, 11:16 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote: So, the upcoming 1T is just a past is prologue for Rags. I just want weed legalization to continue apace so it gets normed just like booze and ciggies in the 1950's. In closing, 1T's are when "Better Living Through Chemistry" comes into its own , and for that, Rags is looking most forward to the end of the icky 4T and towards another 1T and most likely another 2T of chemical bliss.
Watch CA. The marijuana legalizing initiative is leading in the polls so far.
Quote:Millies, please invent some nifty new mind altering chemicals for Rags to enjoy.
May it expand your mind enough so you can enjoy the mystic musings of Eric and see beyond the rantings of the vandal.
(and of course graduate from noise to mystical mind-expanding music. Witchi Tai To gimmera...... and of course http://philosopherswheel.com/toccata.htm )
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(10-30-2016, 10:50 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-30-2016, 12:05 PM)FLBones Wrote: (10-29-2016, 04:30 PM)disasterzone Wrote: (10-27-2016, 12:31 PM)FLBones Wrote: Well, it's like it says in the 4T book, those outside of the mainstream culture feel stifled by the conformity. They may also be prone to prosecution as was the case with McCartyhism. During the last 1T, the red scare set about a socially conservative climate which the 50s are known for. The 1920s however was a decade where the social climate became more and more liberal.
Would they drink or severely isolate from other people themselves to survive the 1T and numb themselves until it's over? Turn to financial risk taking because the normal system has nothing to offer them and they really have nothing to lose?
In past first turnings, they were usually put to socially useful tasks and blended in. If they followed the conventional way of the High, they'd probably find it dull and mind numbing. May use tranquilizers to numb this out, like some housewives did in the 1950s or the Beatniks. For those who openly go againist the norms of the High era, they will find themselves at odds from society, finding it difficult to get along with others and face expulsion dealing with an us vs them mentality.
I think during a High era, for the late wave artists, and the early wave prophet generations, they just go along with the flow because there's nothing else to do but their inner lives are under turmoil at the same time. As time goes on, the inner struggles become overpowering and they sense this void in society and thus, the 2T begins. I'm sure Awakenings are bring some relief to these people.
What happens to Civics or very old artists who find themselves at odds with society during the 1T when the 2T comes around? Would they feel relieved or would they feel their life was wasted because they were forced to live so much of it in eras they were at odds with? Would they lament being born in the wrong time?
Also what would happen to one of them if despite conflicting with so many people, continued to get their way during the 1T? Would it cause major hate and resentment?
-- l've only lived thru 1 2T but it seems to me like the Artists were feuling it. Dylan, Grace Slick, Ginsburg, Jane Fonda, Jerry Garcia, Abbie Hoffman.... & Timothy Leary was a Civic so... l would say if they are @odds w/society during a 1T, they start the 2nd T
my 2 yr old Niece/yr old Nephew 2020
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11-08-2016, 06:40 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-08-2016, 06:41 AM by Marypoza.)
(11-07-2016, 11:32 AM)X_4AD_84 Wrote: (11-07-2016, 05:26 AM)Eric the Green Wrote: (10-30-2016, 11:16 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote: So, the upcoming 1T is just a past is prologue for Rags. I just want weed legalization to continue apace so it gets normed just like booze and ciggies in the 1950's. In closing, 1T's are when "Better Living Through Chemistry" comes into its own , and for that, Rags is looking most forward to the end of the icky 4T and towards another 1T and most likely another 2T of chemical bliss.
Watch CA. The marijuana legalizing initiative is leading in the polls so far.
Quote:Millies, please invent some nifty new mind altering chemicals for Rags to enjoy.
May it expand your mind enough so you can enjoy the mystic musings of Eric and see beyond the rantings of the vandal.
(and of course graduate from noise to mystical mind-expanding music. Witchi Tai To gimmera...... and of course http://philosopherswheel.com/toccata.htm )
I'm keeping my fingers crossed that I can soon self medicate with Cannabis without getting a Medical Cannabis Card. Many don't realize it, but getting such a card is a permanent item on one's government record. It precludes one from certain approvals and can be deemed a negative finding for various background investigations. Hopefully all of that will be history in the near future, at least in California. National will hopefully be next.
-- then why are you pimping the hildabitch, who wants to make things worse? Jill (a MD, btw) wants to legalize weed. the Donald views it as a states rights matter & would leave it up to them. Not sure how thst would affect one's Govt record, whatever that is. lf weed legalization is that important to you vote Jill
my 2 yr old Niece/yr old Nephew 2020
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(11-08-2016, 06:40 AM)Marypoza Wrote: -- then why are you pimping the hildabitch, who wants to make things worse? Jill (a MD, btw) wants to legalize weed. the Donald views it as a states rights matter & would leave it up to them. Not sure how thst would affect one's Govt record, whatever that is. lf weed legalization is that important to you vote Jill
A vote for that anti-vax nutcase is a vote for Trump.
#MakeTheDemocratsGreatAgain
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You're fine with pure bolsheviks, then.
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11-08-2016, 04:04 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-08-2016, 04:05 PM by Mikebert.)
(11-08-2016, 03:42 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: You're fine with pure bolsheviks, then.
I would think so. But we should ask X_4AD_84 if he/she favored Bernie in the primary. Recall that X_4AD_84 is a former rightie, so he would think anyone economically to the left of Obama (e.g. FDR, Truman, Johnson, G. Wallace, Mondale, Sanders) as a Bolshevist.
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(11-08-2016, 05:28 PM)X_4AD_84 Wrote: (11-08-2016, 03:42 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: You're fine with pure bolsheviks, then.
I'm not, however, such are few and far between. I think Kinser79 or whatever he goes by these days is one. A pretty rare bird.
Kinser supported trump -- probably because he though that Trump would so mess things up that Americans would quickly be prepared for a Marxist insurrection.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.
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Joined: May 2016
Basically, two sorts of behaviors die in a Crisis. One sort is behavior that had long existed and had developed a reputation for seediness or sleaziness that people had tolerated because there was no way in which to contest them until one Crisis had the rest of the relevant world turning against it (think of slavery in the American Civil War) or that proved impossible to keep going (empire-building such as that of Alexander, Caesar, Genghiz Khan, or Adolf Hitler) because it had become too dangerous. Imagine a Hitler with nukes -- and human extinction. The Divine Right of Kings may appear to this day on Canadian coins, but nobody takes DGR (Dei Gratia Regina/Rex) seriously anymore. That largely died in the American, French, and Latin-American revolutions. But those are old and increasingly-questionable institutions, ideas, or practices.
The other sort is relatively-novel practice from the preceding 3T -- bad business practice, mindless mass culture, corrupt (and often tribal) politics, exploitative sexuality, fads and crazes, flawed theories, and perverse religiosity. Need I remind you that although there is still a nostalgia market for times as long ago as the 1930's (people watching film of the time and listening to Big Band music are not the original audiences), there is none for the 1920's and never was? The 1920's were a slum of a decade for numbingly-awful mass culture, such pseudo-intellectual garbage as eugenics (a/k/a "scientific racism"), a last hurrah for the Gilded Age (Gilded Greed without Gilded innovation), and a bubble economy? The Lost Generation, which most bought into that nonsense, ended up choosing bland tradition instead of such garbage.
Hybrids in institutions -- often businesses and business models with high costs, especially in the marketing of their wares, often go under. Think of the dead malls... and retailers such as Sears, Bon-Ton, and JC Penney that largely chose them. Who cares about costs when there is a large middle class capable of paying MSLP (Manufacturer's Suggested List Price) that will compensate for the high costs of operating in a mall with impulse shopping. Whoops! The middle-income market shrinks significantly, many customers end up at Wal*Mart, and an entity like Amazon that can offer something very specific instead of relying upon impulse-shopping gains relevance while Bon-Ton dies, Sears practically dies, and JC Penney goes on life support.
Sticking with 3T practices that lose their mass appeal in a 4T and never recover will at the least consign one to extreme loneliness.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.
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Joined: Jan 2021
I think it depends on what you mean by 'lives like the 3T.'
In general, during a 1T, our society's ability to empathize with those outside of one of our personal 'tribes' gradually increases and, as that occurs, so does our willingness to include them in the existing social compact whereas in a 3T, the inverse of that happens. If you think of 'living in a 3T' as being someone who can empathize with those who aren't like you and thinks they should have the same rights and opportunities as you do, then in a 1T you might be on the forefront of the counter culture.
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